Nota Bene: News from the Yale Library

Transcription

Nota Bene: News from the Yale Library
Nota Bene
News from the Yale Library
volume xxxi, number 2, summer/fall 2016
generous gift to transform
the digital humanities lab in
sterling memorial library
Yale scholars are increasingly interested in working
with the vast quantities of historical, literary,
artistic, and musical material that have been digitized in recent years. Quantitative and algorithmic
approaches to this “Humanistic Big Data” are
promising, but humanists first want to understand
the conceptual frameworks and computational tools
of these new ways of conducting research. Yale
University Library’s Digital Humanities Laboratory
(DHLab), founded in 2015 through a grant from The
Goizueta Foundation, fosters this important work.
The DHLab, currently operating in temporary
quarters on the third floor of Sterling Memorial
Library (sml), will soon have a permanent home
thanks to the great generosity of University Library
Council members Richard ’53 and Barbara Franke.
Their gift will renovate a familiar space, the Franke
Family Reading Room, named in their honor in
1998. Supporting teaching and research, the freshly
furnished DHLab will be a state-of-the-art facility
that uses computational approaches to create new
entry points into Yale University Library’s remarkable physical and digital collections.
susan gibbons reappointed as
university librarian and deputy
deputy provost
President Peter Salovey recently announced the reappointment of Susan Gibbons as University Librarian
and Deputy Provost, through June 30, 2021. In her
second term, Susan also takes on new leadership
responsibilities for collections and scholarly communication. Her portfolio as deputy provost will now
The creation of this new facility dovetails with
other major renovations—and temporary relocations—across the library. During the past academic
year, the Franke Room has served Beinecke readers
while the landmark 1963 building has undergone
renovations. In 2016–2017, the Franke Room will
provide temporary quarters for Manuscripts and
Archives researchers while that department’s space in
sml is under construction. By 2018, the final refurbishing will take place, equipping the Franke Family
Reading Room to house the DHLab and encourage
hybrid scholarship at Yale permanently. db, bbg & dh
Barbara and Rich Franke at
the exhibition opening for
Sculpture Victorious: Art in an
Age of Invention, 1837–1901,
Yale Center for British Art,
September, 2014
Photo: Harold Shapiro
include support of all of the university’s galleries,
museums, and other collections, giving them unified
attention and creating new opportunities for interdisciplinary collaboration in this vital subset of the
university’s academic resources.
Many people contributed to the reappointment
review process, sharing perspectives on Susan’s
accomplishments and aspirations for the future of
Yale’s libraries and collections. One recurring theme
among their comments was that Susan’s leadership
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has transcended Yale’s library and, indeed, has transcended Yale. The consummate university citizen,
she is equally adept at representing the broad goals
of the institution as illuminating the finer details
of our digital and material holdings. A respected
voice within the wider academic community, she has
elevated Yale’s presence on the national and international stage, notably in the areas of data management and access, and in developing new institutional
partnerships.
Susan began as University Librarian on July 1,
2011, and was named a Deputy Provost on Jan. 1,
2015. She holds M.L.S. and M.A. degrees in history
from Indiana University, a professional M.B.A. from
the University of Massachusetts, and a doctorate in
higher education administration from the University
of Rochester. Before coming to Yale, she held library
positions at Indiana University, the University of
Massachusetts at Amherst, and the University of
library prizes celebrate
undergraduate research at yale
Every year, the Yale University Library offers several
prizes for senior essays that demonstrate remarkable
use of the library’s collections. The prizes awarded
during the 2016 commencement weekend reflected a
dazzling array of topics and perspectives.
Manuscripts and Archives awards two prizes
annually in memory of Diane E. Kaplan. The prize
honoring a senior essay written about Yale was
awarded to Thomas Hopson (Trumbull College) for
his essay “The Roots of Radicalism: Natural Rights,
Corporate Liberty, and Regional Factions in Colonial
Connecticut, 1740-1766”. The other Diane E. Kaplan
Memorial Prize recognizes a senior essay based on
research in collections held by Manuscripts and
Archives. Jacob L. Wasserman (Saybrook College)
won this year’s prize for his essay “Untold Affairs:
Case Studies of World War I German Internment”.
The Harvey M. Applebaum ’59 Award recognizes
an outstanding senior essay developed from research
in the library’s government information collections.
This year, Colleen Flynn (Timothy Dwight College)
won first prize for her political science senior essay,
“Treading the Path of Least Resistance: fda’s
Susan Gibbons, University
Librarian and Deputy Provost
for Collections and Scholarly
Communication
Rochester, where she directed digital library initiatives before being appointed in 2008 as Vice Provost
and the Andrew H. and Janet Dayton Neilly Dean of
River Campus Libraries.
Regulation of the Subtherapeutic Use of Antibiotics
in Animal Agriculture, 1970–2015”. Second prizes
were awarded to Devon Geyelin (Trumbull College)
for her history senior essay, “The Re-Recruit: A
Family History of American Media and the cia in
the First Decades of the Cold War”, and to Julie
Lowenstein (Trumbull College) for her history
senior essay, “U.S. Foreign Policy and the SovietAfghan War: A Revisionist History”.
The Library Map Prize is awarded to a Yale
College senior for the best use of maps in a senior
essay. Rebecca Beilinson (Trumbull College)
received this year’s award for her ecology and evolutionary biology senior essay, “Species Distribution
Modeling of North American Odonates”.
Yale student researchers approach library
resources with novel interpretations and ideas, and
these prestigious prizes honor students’ exceptional
research and writing. This year’s winning essays
reflect the overall diversity, strength, and richness of
undergraduate research at Yale. bl, mm & hp
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ivy plus libraries appoints
director of collections initiatives
The Ivy Plus Libraries, a partnership of 13 leading
academic research libraries, recently announced
the appointment of Galadriel Chilton as Director of
Collections Initiatives. While the position is organizationally based at Yale, Galadriel will work through the
Ivy Plus Collection Development Group – representing
all the partner libraries – in a participatory decisionmaking process. The Ivy Plus Libraries include Brown,
Chicago, Columbia, Cornell, Dartmouth, Duke,
Harvard, Johns Hopkins, mit, Princeton, University of
Pennsylvania, Stanford, and Yale.
The Director of Collections Initiatives will facilitate collection development and management in a
way that recognizes the partners’ research and special
collections as one unified collection that supports
the teaching, research, and public missions of the
focus on data at yale
Established in 2013, the Yale Day of Data is an annual
event bringing expert speakers to Yale from academia,
government, and industry to discuss issues related
to data-intensive research across all disciplines, while
showcasing successful collaborations at Yale.
This fall, Yale’s Day of Data will be held on
December 2nd, with a focus on openness, reproducibility, and transparency in research. The keynote
speakers will be Harlan Krumholz, Harold H. Hines,
Jr. Professor of Medicine and director for the Center
for Outcomes Research Evaluation at Yale; Professor
respective institutions as well as serving the global
scholarly community. With collective collections as
the objective, Galadriel will serve as the principal
planner, project manager, and negotiator for initiatives that promise substantial positive impacts in the
development, management, and use of collections in
any format.
Borrow Direct, a resource-sharing network, was
the Ivy Plus Libraries’ first cooperative initiative, and
its success established the foundation for collective
collections and other cooperative efforts.
Galadriel joins Ivy Plus from the University of
Connecticut, where she oversaw e-resource management and was recently promoted to head of the
licensing and acquisitions unit. She brings to the
position a proven track record of initiating and executing complex projects, and has an extensive record
of professional contributions through instruction,
presentations, and publication. gc
Brian Nosek, Department of Psychology at the
University of Virginia and executive director of the
Open Science Foundation; and Erin McKiernan,
a pioneer of open science work and professor of
physics and biomedical physics at the National
Autonomous University of Mexico.
In addition to an annual fall event, the Center for
Science and Social Science Information (csssi) also
sponsors the Day of Data Spring Discussion Series.
Further information about upcoming Day of
Data events, as well as past keynote presentations,
can be found at: http://elischolar.library.yale.edu/
dayofdata. mh
Nota Bene is published during the academic year
to acquaint the Yale community and others with
the resources of the Yale Library.
editorial information
contributors
University Librarian
Susan Gibbons
Please direct comments and questions to
Amanda Patrick, Editor, Yale University Library
(203-432-4484, [email protected])
Editor
Amanda Patrick
Director of Communications
David Baker (db)
Galadriel Chilton (gc)
Roberta Dougherty (rd)
Basie Bales Gitlin (bbg)
Daniel Hebert (dh)
Michelle Hudson (mh)
Bill Landis (bl)
Melanie Maksin (mm)
Jonathan Manton (jm)
Christine McCarthy (cm)
Copyright ©2016
Yale University Library
issn 0894-1351
Galadriel Chilton
Photo: Merlita Murphy
Copy Editor
Christa Sammons
Publication Design
Rebecca Martz, Anton Sovetov
Office of the University Printer
Patrick O’Brien (pob)
Hilary Purrington (hp)
Jae Jennifer Rossman (jjr)
Joanne Rudof (jr)
Kerri Sancomb (ks)
Allison Van Rhee (avr)
Susan Wheeler (sw)
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inside the gates conservation
lab: surveying the condition of
rare rolled maps
Conservation & Exhibition Services—part of the Yale
Library’s Preservation Department—recently hosted
a conservation condition survey for over 700 rare
maps that will be integrated into the Beinecke Rare
Book and Manuscript Library’s collections this fall.
The condition of the maps, dating from the late
17th to the mid-20th century, was unknown, since
most had been stored tightly rolled for many years.
An experienced conservator of art on paper who has
worked extensively with maps was hired as a consultant to assess their condition prior to cataloging.
The consultant was able to work on site in the new
Center for Library Preservation and Conservation
at 344 Winchester Avenue. In the past, because of
restrictions imposed by the old preservation space
in the basement of Sterling Memorial Library,
collections such as this would necessarily have
been shipped out for assessment. This assessment,
however, was conducted in the Gates Conservation
Laboratory, gift of University Library Council
member Stephen F. Gates ’68, a collector of globes
and books about globes. With the new space, the
library now has the opportunity to take a proactive
approach to the physical care of fragile, oversized
objects which formerly posed a substantial challenge.
The availability of a full-sized loading dock
made it easy and safe for art handlers (overseen by
An exceptionally long Asian
manuscript map spans two
large examination tables
when fully unrolled.
library staff ) to deliver the maps to the conservation
laboratory. Once inside, the new examination room
provided a staging area where the packed maps (each
at least 3 feet wide and up to 8 or 9 feet in length)
could be unrolled onto oversized light tables.
At the end of the assessment, the library will have
a complete picture of what needs to be done to conserve all the maps, with the ultimate goal of providing access to these amazing cartographic artifacts for
students and researchers. cm
Some of the 700 maps
unpacked and staged for
eventual unrolling and review
yale students curate library
exhibits
Stephanie Tomasson
(Jonathan Edwards ’16)
discussing her exhibit
Senators, Sinners, and
Supermen: The 1950s Comic
Book Scare and Juvenile
Delinquency, on view until
September 22 in the sml
Exhibit Corridor.
In 2015, the Yale University Library launched a
three-year pilot program to provide students with
opportunities to curate exhibits and display research.
Student Research at Yale University Library, on view
from mid-fall through the end of the spring semester, highlights four exceptional student research
projects. The selected students curate small,
facsimile-based displays that incorporate resources
available at the Yale Library. The exhibit not only
shows the results of the students’ research, but
also emphasizes the breadth and accessibility of the
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library’s collections. For example, the most recent
exhibit featured primary sources available through
Manuscripts and Archives, the East Asia Library, and
the Beinecke Library, among others.
The annual “Senior Exhibit Project” selects one
senior undergraduate student to create a larger
exhibit based on his or her senior essay. The exhibit
is installed in May and remains on view until the
start of the fall semester. The process of developing
a thesis into a visual display often encourages the
student to approach his or her topic from a new perspective and make additional discoveries. Stephanie
Tomasson (Jonathan Edwards ’16), the most recent
student curator, created an exhibit that examined
comic books as tools for both entertainment and
sociopolitical commentary. The visual nature of her
topic lent itself particularly well to the curatorial
opportunity, and Tomasson realized that adapting her research for an exhibit allowed her to make
connections that she could not necessarily make in
a written essay.
The selected student curators have approached
their projects with imagination, enthusiasm, and
professionalism. A curator’s talk and reception
accompany each of these exhibits and have been
well attended by classmates, faculty, library staff,
and the general public. Curatorial work at the Yale
Library allows students to share current and ongoing
research through an experience that is challenging,
hands-on, and incredibly rewarding. ks & hp
the beinecke reopens after
major renovation
from various activists, authors, poets, and dramatists. Destined to be Known: The James Weldon Johnson
Memorial Collection at 75 celebrates the anniversary
of the James Weldon Johnson Collection at Yale
and features key African-American figures from the
Beinecke’s collections. Highlights include manuscripts by Langston Hughes and Zora Neale Hurston,
artwork by Augusta Savage and Roy DeCarava, the
only manuscript known to have been written by
a fugitive slave, and selections documenting the life
of James Weldon Johnson. avr
Following a sixteen-month major renovation
to update the library’s mechanical systems and
to provide enhanced facilities for supporting
research and teaching, the Beinecke Rare Book
and Manuscript Library will reopen to the public
on Tuesday, September 6th.
In addition to major upgrades to the library’s
physical, mechanical, electrical, plumbing, fire
protection, and security infrastructure, the building’s heating and air conditioning systems were also
replaced. Bronze and marble features were refurbished on the interior and exterior of the building,
and the Noguchi Sculpture Garden was restored. To
enhance teaching while using the collections, two
new classrooms have been added, and state of the art
technology has been installed in the classrooms and
teaching spaces.
A public open house will be held on Saturday,
October 8th, to offer the New Haven community
a chance to see the space up close.
Two semester-long exhibitions open on September
23rd. Recent Acquisitions features materials procured
in the last three to four years, including photographs
of Abraham Lincoln from the Meserve-Kunhardt
collection; a 13th-century manuscript book of the
Gospels; an archive of 19th-century photographs
of a multi-generational African-American family
from the foothills of the Sierra Nevada; and papers
Edwin C. Schroeder, Director
of the Beinecke Library,
in front of the iconic stack
tower. Photo: Jessica Hill,
Wall Street Journal
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geoffrey h. hartman fellowship
to support research at the
fortunoff video archive for
holocaust testimonies
Earlier this year, Yale marked the passing of
Geoffrey H. Hartman, Sterling Professor Emeritus
of English and Comparative Literature and
faculty advisor to the Fortunoff Video Archive for
Holocaust Testimonies—a collection of the Yale
Library. His death on March 14, 2016, was a loss not
only for those who knew and loved him, but also
for the countless admirers of his scholarly work.
Professor Hartman was one of the world’s foremost
Wordsworth scholars and a pioneer in the field of
deconstruction theory. He was a key figure in the
establishment of the Judaic Studies Program at Yale,
and his published work reflects all these areas of
expertise, as well as the significance of the Holocaust
and the importance of testimony in particular.
To honor his legacy, the Fortunoff Archive has
established the Geoffrey H. Hartman Fellowship.
This dynamic, multidisciplinary fellowship program
will encourage use of the archive’s materials for
scholarly research and will help foster a new generation of academics who can incorporate testimony as a
key resource in Holocaust studies and related fields.
Professor Hartman’s former students always attested
to his intellectual generosity, engagement, and dedication to the mentorship of young scholars, making
this fellowship a perfect way to recognize his legacy.
The call for applications for the first Geoffrey
H. Hartman Fellowship is scheduled for December
2016, with the fellowship commencing in August
2017. For more information, please contact Stephen
Naron, Director of the Fortunoff Video Archive
for Holocaust Testimonies, at fortunoff.archive@
yale.edu. To make a gift supporting the Hartman
Fellowship, please contact Basie Bales Gitlin,
Director of Development for Yale University Library,
at [email protected] or (203) 432-9851. jr
the yale library remembers the
legacy of elie wiesel
The world was saddened recently to learn of the
death of Nobel Laureate Elie Wiesel. The Yale
Library was privileged to have had Wiesel as a
member of the Honorary Board of Advisors of the
Fortunoff Video Archive for Holocaust Testimonies,
since its founding in 1981. Wiesel actively promoted
the Holocaust Survivors Film Project, the New
Haven grassroots project that preceded the Fortunoff
Archive. He urged survivors to share their stories
so that they and their loved ones would not only be
remembered in perpetuity, but would also provide
present and future generations with the opportunity
to learn about the Holocaust from the perspectives of
victims. The following excerpts are from Professor
Wiesel’s remarks at the inauguration of the Video
Archive at the Yale Library in November 1982.
“Future generations will be in your debt. No person
in the world is as capable of gratitude as a survivor
is, for we know that it is by sheer luck that any of us
is here...they are witnesses, and therefore, you must
listen to them, and listen with all your heart and all
your soul….listen to them and listen to them well.”
Elie Wiesel spoke at several subsequent Fortunoff
Archive conferences and events and was the Chubb
Fellow lecturer at Yale in December 2006. jr
Elie Wiesel (right) and Professor
Geoffrey Hartman (left) at
a Fortunoff Video Archive
conference, circa late 1980s.
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Entrance: A rendering of the
lobby located near the newly
opened York Street entrance
depicts the openness of the
space, including flexible
discussion areas. Courtesy of
Newman Architects.
focus on teaching and learning:
a renovation and relocation in
progress
In January, Yale’s new Center for Teaching and
Learning (ctl) will move into renovated space in
Sterling Memorial Library—space recently vacated
when the library’s technical services staff moved to
a new location at 344 Winchester Avenue. Currently
housed in 320 York Street, the center fosters excellence in teaching and learning at Yale by providing
teaching consultations, support for student learning
and writing, global online learning opportunities,
advancement grants to faculty and graduate students, and a host of other initiatives that promote
Yale’s teaching mission.
“Locating the ctl in Sterling Memorial Library
will increase access to a wealth of resources,” said
Jennifer Frederick, Executive Director of Yale’s ctl.
“Our Sterling space is designed to prioritize collaboration and teamwork, both within the ctl and
with key partners such as our library colleagues. The
central importance of teaching and learning at Yale is
signaled by placing us in the heart of campus.”
The renovated space will occupy 35,000 square
feet of the library, including a corridor connecting
changing keys: music library
renovations
In early June, the Irving S. Gilmore Music Library,
located in Sterling Memorial Library, embarked on a
renovation project that will continue through midDecember 2016.
The renovation is happening in tandem with
building the new location for the Center for
the newly opened York Street entrance to the nave.
The center’s new home will include a technologylearning studio, several flexible classroom or meeting
spaces, and one-on-one tutoring rooms.
Susan Gibbons, University Librarian and
Deputy Provost for Collections and Scholarly
Communication, commented, “We are very excited
to welcome the ctl into Sterling Memorial Library.
The center’s support of teaching and learning is a
perfect complement to the research services provided by the library. This new venture will transform Sterling Memorial Library into a key locus for
academic support on campus”. pob
First floor: A layout of
the first floor depicts the
corridor between the nave,
Music Library, and Center
for Teaching and Learning.
Flexible meeting spaces,
classrooms, tutoring rooms,
and staff desks are also
depicted on the floorplan.
Courtesy of Newman
Architects.
Teaching and Learning, who share the neighboring space. Once complete, the principal entrance for
both the Music Library and the Center for Teaching
and Learning will be via the York Street side of
Sterling Memorial Library, though access will also be
available through the nave.
The highlights of the renovation include a new
circulation desk, new staff offices, improved shelving for the Recordings Collection, a new location for
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self-service photocopying and scanning, and two
new technology-focused seminar rooms. A glass
wall will provide an imposing new entrance, and the
space will be further enhanced with exhibit cases
and large digital displays in the corridor outside of
the Music Library entrance. Services will continue as
normal throughout the renovation; more information can be found on the Music Library’s website. jm
1.
1. Design visualization of
the new circulation desk in
the Gilmore Music Library.
Courtesy of Newman
Architects.
2. Design visualization of the
new entrance to the Gilmore
Music Library. Courtesy of
Newman Architects.
2.
renovating manuscripts and
archives
This coming spring, Manuscripts and Archives
(mssa), an important special collections repository
within Sterling Memorial Library, will receive its
first major renovation. The department houses over
85,000 linear feet (more than 16 miles) of archival
material, incorporating the University Archives as
well as strong collections in international affairs,
contemporary architecture, and lgbt studies,
among other areas. Researchers make use of mssa
collections—and the staff who provide access to
them—heavily: in 2014–2015, mssa staff received
6,500 reference inquiries and provided patrons with
55,000 pages of pdf digital reproductions.
The renovation of Manuscripts and Archives
will revitalize a beautiful space within Sterling
Memorial Library, provide for better stewardship
of materials through environmental control and
security upgrades, and enhance the researcher experience with improved lighting, reduced noise, and
improved consultation space. The project will also
transform the former Gutenberg Chapel, originally
the purpose-built home in Sterling Memorial
Library for Yale’s Gutenberg Bible, into a secure
classroom to meet increasing faculty demand for
teaching with Manuscripts and Archives collections.
The non-functional stone fireplace in the future
classroom will be lifted to create a door into the
Linonia & Brothers Reading Room (L&B).
This important renovation will require significant investment from Yale alumni and friends, and
fundraising is just beginning now. To learn more,
please speak with Basie Bales Gitlin, Director of
Development for Yale University Library, at (203)
432-9851 or [email protected]. bbg
Library supporters share
their enthusiasm for the
Manuscripts and Archives
renovation project with Yale
Development staff—left to
right: University Library
Council (ulc) Chair William
H. Wright II ’82; ulc
member Nancy Marx Better
’84; Yale Library Associates
Trustees Chair and ulc
member David Richards ’67,
’72 J.D.; and former Secretary
of Yale Sam Chauncey ’57.
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1. The Grand Exhibition
Room, originally designed
to display the Gutenberg
Bible when the space housed
Yale’s rare book collection,
will become a classroom for
those using Manuscripts
and Archives collections in
their teaching. Courtesy of
Newman Architects.
2. Changes in lighting,
climate control, and the
layout of the reading room
will improve the researcher
experience as well as the
preservation and security of
Manuscripts and Archives
collections. Courtesy of
Newman Architects.
2.
1.
30 years of artspace archives
to be housed at the yale arts
library
The Robert B. Haas Family Arts Library recently
acquired the archives of Artspace, New Haven’s
vibrant non-profit organization for contemporary
art, currently celebrating its 30th anniversary. The
archive preserves the organization’s legacy of connecting contemporary artists, local audiences, and
community resources. Artspace will deed to Yale
all historical materials related to its founding and
operations, which include robust exhibition and
commissioning programs and ongoing initiatives
such as the Summer Apprenticeship Program for
New Haven public school students and the annual
City-Wide Open Studios festival. The archive contains exhibition documentation and related printed
ephemera, administrative and financial records, correspondence, and documentation of the organization’s work with partner institutions and community
members, including many Yale affiliates and alumni.
Artspace Executive Director Helen Kauder
explained, “This partnership will preserve 30 years
of materials documenting Artspace activities, and
acknowledge the significance of the work by local
artists, curators, graphic designers, and the constellation of efforts to make New Haven a vital contemporary arts community.” Most recently, Arts Library
Associate Director Jae Rossman was involved with
the Artspace exhibition CT (un) Bound (November
2014–January 2015), which featured new book arts
commissions and a companion show at the Arts
Library, Beyond the Codex. In conjunction with
Artspace’s exhibit Library Science (November 2011–
January 2012), the Arts Library served as the site of
an artist residency that produced an installation and
artist’s book project.
“The Arts Library is very excited about this
acquisition,” said Jae Rossman. “We look forward to
making accessible these important historical documents, which will further the dialogue between local
arts communities and the arts disciplines at Yale.” jjr
Examples of ephemera
designed for City Wide Open
Studios and other Artspace
programs. Many pieces of
ephemera have been designed
by Yale alumni.
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exhibit highlights
Henry Roe Cloud was the
first full-blooded Native
American to graduate from
Yale College. ‘Henry Roe
Cloud as a young man.’ Circa
1910. Roe family papers,
1802–1977 (inclusive), 1860–
1930 (bulk). Manuscripts &
Archives, Yale University.
“Doctor Pollard Leads Ethics
Rounds.” Copyright 1993
Sue Coe
Celebrating Yale History in Manuscripts and
Archives: Extraordinary Alumni
Celebrating Yale History in Manuscripts and Archives,
now on view in the Sterling Memorial Library
Memorabilia Room, explores fascinating details of
Yale’s history through the display of primary sources
available at the library. Most compelling, however,
is the exhibit’s focus on “firsts,” minority students
who were the first to gain admission to or graduate
from specific programs. Henry Roe Cloud (B.A.
1910, M.A. 1914), Jasper Alston Atkins (LL.B. 1922),
and Sylvia Ardyn Boone (M.A. 1974, Ph.D. 1979) are
among the featured alumni. By focusing on several
extraordinary students, Celebrating Yale History in
Manuscripts and Archives highlights how individuals
can effectively and positively impact culture on the
Yale campus and beyond. hp
of pioneering art activist Dr. Eric Avery at the
University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston.
Sue Coe is considered one of the foremost political artists working today. A firm believer in the
power of media to effect change, she has seen her
graphic work published in The New York Times, The
New Yorker, and Rolling Stone, and included in the
permanent collections of major museums such as the
Metropolitan Museum of Art, Museum of Modern
Art, and the Whitney Museum of American Art.
There will be an opportunity to meet Sue Coe
and Eric Avery on September 15 as they present the
Barwick Lecture at 5 pm—a talk sponsored by the
Program for Humanities in Medicine and co-sponsored by the Cushing/Whitney Medical Library.
More details can be found on the Medical Library’s
website. sw
“The aids Suite”: Exhibit and conversation with
artists/activists Sue Coe and Eric Avery, M.D.
On Thursday, September 15, “The aids Suite,” hiv
Positive Women in Prison and Other Works by Artist/
Activist Sue Coe will open at the Cushing/Whitney
Medical Library. The exhibit introduces seven large
drawings by Sue Coe selected from thirteen acquired
in 2015. The new works will be exhibited with prints
added to the Medical Library collection over the last
decade, as well as with previously acquired drawings from the series on women in prison. Both series
are based upon the patients and medical practice
An American Orientalist: The Life and Legacy of
Edward E. Salisbury (1814–1901)
This fall, the Yale Library will host an exhibit
dedicated to Edward Elbridge Salisbury (Yale
Class of 1832), a professor of Arabic and Sanskrit
languages and literature—the first such position
in the Americas. Marking the 175th anniversary of
his appointment, the exhibit explores his scholarly development, his career at Yale and after, his
benefactions (including two endowed chairs), and
the growth of Yale collections of Islamic manuscripts
after Salisbury’s death in 1901. A discerning collector, Salisbury built up his library of Arabic and
Sanskrit materials from auctions of the libraries
of prominent European Orientalists and through
personal contacts with American missionaries in
Middle Eastern countries. He donated this “Oriental
library”—one hundred manuscripts and hundreds of
rare early printed European books in Arabic, Persian,
and Sanskrit—to Yale in 1870, making it the largest
American library for the study of these languages in
its day.
The opening talk, given by Roberta L.
Dougherty, librarian for Middle East Studies at
Yale University Library, will be held on Wednesday,
September 21, at 2 pm. rd
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news snippets
A portrait to commemorate graduate coeducation:
Yale’s first women PhDs, 1894
Earlier this year, a new portrait was unveiled in the
Sterling Memorial Library nave of Yale’s first women
PhDs, awarded in 1894. It will hang there permanently to commemorate Yale’s decision to accept
women, which would forever change academia and
the course of women’s advancement. The seven
women in the portrait—Cornelia H.B. Rogers, Sara
Bulkley Rogers, Margaretta Palmer, Mary Augusta
Scott, Laura Johnson Wylie, Charlotte Fitch Roberts,
and Elizabeth Deering Hanscom—graduated in
1894, two years after Yale opened its doors to 23
women seeking graduate degrees, becoming one of
the first universities to admit women. The Brooklyn
based artist Brenda Zlamany painted the inspiring
portrait of these pioneers.
Yale honors archivist Judy Schiff for 55 years of service
On April 4, at the 2016 Long Service Recognition
dinner, President Peter Salovey paid tribute to chief
research archivist for Yale University Library, Judith
Schiff, for her 55 years of dedicated service to the
university. The celebration included a special video
tribute to Judy, whom President Salovey described
as Yale’s official rockstar. Judy was chosen to carry
the university mace in this year’s commencement
ceremony.
New hydration stations installed in the library
New bottle filling stations have been installed in
sml’s Wright Reading Room and in the Thain Café
in the Bass Library. Members of the Yale community
now have access to filtered water while working in
the surrounding spaces. The stations, which also
count the quantity of plastic bottles saved from
waste, are meant to make it easier for people to use
re-fillable water bottles, thereby reducing environmental impact by discouraging the use of disposable
plastic bottles.
calendar of exhibits
Beinecke Rare Book and
Manuscript Library
121 Wall Street
Robert B. Haas Family
Arts Library
180 York Street
Destined to Be Known:
The James Weldon
Johnson Memorial
Collection at 75
September 23–
December 10
The Book As Stage:
Performance and Theater
in the Book Arts
September 26–
December 20
Recent Acquisitions
September 23–
December 10
Center for Science
& Social Science
Information (csssi)
219 Prospect Street
The Africa Initiative
at Yale: Research in
the Sciences and Social
Sciences
Through October 1
The Institution for Social
and Policy Studies at Yale
October 7–February 1,
2017
Divinity Library
409 Prospect Street
Missionary Scientists and
Explorers
June 1–October 1
Two Hundred Years
of Tracts
November–May, 2017
An American in Paris:
The Beaux Arts Education
of Shepherd Stevens
Through September 18
The Lewis Walpole
Library
154 Main Street,
Farmington, CT
James Gillray’s
Hogarthian Progresses
Through September 16
Character Mongers,
or, Trading in People
on Paper in the
Long 18th Century
October 10–January 27,
2017
The Lillian Goldman
Law Library
127 Wall Street,
lower level
Law and Authority in the
Most Serene Republic:
Illuminated Manuscripts
and Printed Books from
Renaissance Venice
Through December 15
Litchfield Unbound:
Unlocking Legal History
through Digitization
October 3–March, 2017
Harvey Cushing / John
Hay Whitney Medical
Library
333 Cedar Street
“The aids Suite,”
hiv Positive Women in
Prison and other works
by artist/activist Sue Coe
September 15–January
10, 2017
Sterling Memorial
Library
120 High Street
Exhibition Corridor
Senators, Sinners and
Supermen: The 1950s
Comic Book Scare and
Juvenile Delinquency
Through September 22
Student Research at Yale
University Library
October 3–April 28, 2017
Memorabilia Room
An American Orientalist:
The Life and Legacy
of Edward E. Salisbury
(1814–1901)
September 6–February
6, 2017
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PO Box 208240, New Haven, Connecticut 06520-8240
Personal bookplate of
Edward Elbridge Salisbury
(1814–1901), Yale professor
of Arabic and Sanskrit
(1841–1856). Found in
many of the items donated
by Salisbury to the Yale
Library in 1870 and after.
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